[MD] What a wonderful world

MarshaV valkyr at att.net
Fri Aug 7 05:53:57 PDT 2009


Jan,


Everybody's a comedienne these days.  I love it!  -   A,,, man, who I once
knew well, wife has recently died, and he called me to bemoan the fact that
he needed a woman to look at.  I suggested he hang around the Mall.  

Treat me like fool, treat me mean and cruel, but love me...  

I'm looking for someone to read me Goethe's Faust in German (which I do not
understand), and in exchange I will read him ZAMM.
 
 
 
Marsha  






 









-----Original Message-----
From: moq_discuss-bounces at lists.moqtalk.org
[mailto:moq_discuss-bounces at lists.moqtalk.org] On Behalf Of Jan-Anders
Sent: Friday, August 07, 2009 8:29 AM
To: moq_discuss at lists.moqtalk.org
Subject: Re: [MD] What a wonderful world

Hello Marsha

Life wisdom is collected and compiled during the whole lifetime. Pieces 
and bits glued together.

This was originally a often repeated sentence one of my friends uttered 
about frying fish:

"Too much salt, or to less, is blasphemy", (to the fish or it's creator, 
that's the question).

----

Yesterday I took sometime to transform of my old 45 rpm records into mp3 
format. My original intention was to buy me an old jukebox. I am 
surprised that so many of the B-sides are about being alone and longing 
for love. It seem like most of the artist were aware of that the A-side 
should be broadcasted by the radio and then they could bring their real 
message on the B-side. It seem to me that what they really wanted to say 
was "I'm so alone and I wanna get laid". Or what do you think about the 
simple rhetoric in the lyrics of the B-side of Albert Hammonds single 
"It never rains in southern california", on the B-side he sings "is 
there anyone in the audience with a pad that I can crash into?" Hit 
records are distributed in billions all over the world with the more 
hidden message on the b-sides left over to listen to when the a-side was 
too filled up with pops and cracks. Or when the star is playing the hit 
single for his visitor at the hotel room. "Hey baby, Wanna listen to the 
other side of my bullet record?". Thats my theory. Is there anyone in 
the world that have studied the rhetoric qualities of the lyrics of the 
B-sides of hit records? What about the B-side of Buffy Sainte-Maries 
"Soldier Blue", "Until it's time for you to go". Doesn't that sound like 
a desperate call for some love time?

I was captured and seduced by three indian women. I'm sorry but I don't 
remember all of it. It was 25 years ago but I recall that I was told 
that Wakantanka "blows his whistle" and when he do, "your thinking are 
puzzled and start questioning". She draw her finger slowly from the top 
of my head and down my face. When you are looking curiously, it's 
wakantanka playing hide-n-seek. Wakantanka appeared in some way in a 
straight line where she pointed from the brain down to the genitals, 
Wakantanka puts courage into your heart and power in your heartbeat, 
wakantanka calls for your hunger and stands behind the sexual 
arousement. Anyone heard about this before?

On the B-side of "Strange kind of woman" by Deep Purple the title is 
actually "I'm alone". The guitar solo from Ritchie Blackmore gives me 
chicken skin. Wow! This is power, pattern and performance in a perfect 
palanced quality!

Or is it just Wakantanka playing with my hearing?


Jan-Anders

>
> Hello Jan,
>
> Thank you for the advice...  Sighting your last sentence, blasphemy
towards
> what?  Are you referring to something in particular?   
>
>
> Marsha
>
>
>
>
>
>   
Moq_Discuss mailing list
Listinfo, Unsubscribing etc.
http://lists.moqtalk.org/listinfo.cgi/moq_discuss-moqtalk.org
Archives:
http://lists.moqtalk.org/pipermail/moq_discuss-moqtalk.org/
http://moq.org.uk/pipermail/moq_discuss_archive/




More information about the Moq_Discuss mailing list